Texas Star
US Veteran
I've read that if one drops an egg in a pan of water and it sinks, it's fresh enough to eat. If it floats, it's rotten. I may have that backward.
Does anyone know the correct version and if it's true?
I have a dozen eggs in the frig., but the date on the carton isn't legible. I've had them maybe three weeks, and the lady who does the shopping for home delivery orders neglected to check for clear expiration dates.
While we're on this, is it true that most eggs last 2-3 weeks beyond the date on the carton, if kept refrigerated? I've cooked some that were about 2 weeks "late" and they were okay.
Finally, I wrote in a short story on FanFiction.net that a British scientist in the 1920's had asked for eggs fried "over easy." A contentious British reader who may be a troll said in a review that Britons did/do not eat eggs that way, always having them served as what Americans call, "sunny side up."
This seems odd to me, and I think he/she was just being mean and petty..
Do any of our former Brits or others who've eaten eggs in the UK want to comment?
Ian Fleming certainly liked scrambled eggs and had James Bond order them even at supper meals. Fleming said that he could eat scrambled eggs at any meal, and even published his recipe for scrambled.
I don't recall which wine Bond ordered with scrambled eggs for dinner, but a good Riesling or Sauvignon blanc would work well.
My critic is off base, anyway, as the girl cooking that scientist's eggs was Anglo-Brazilian and they were on a remote Brazilian plateau, where the man had probably encountered over easy eggs, anyway, as the girl was intimate with an American reporter who'd probably asked for eggs that way. Some people just want to complain.
A friend in the UK this week said she'd check there, but additional info is appreciated. Those stories are read in over 60 nations, but only this one troll (?) has made such an observation.
Does anyone know the correct version and if it's true?
I have a dozen eggs in the frig., but the date on the carton isn't legible. I've had them maybe three weeks, and the lady who does the shopping for home delivery orders neglected to check for clear expiration dates.
While we're on this, is it true that most eggs last 2-3 weeks beyond the date on the carton, if kept refrigerated? I've cooked some that were about 2 weeks "late" and they were okay.
Finally, I wrote in a short story on FanFiction.net that a British scientist in the 1920's had asked for eggs fried "over easy." A contentious British reader who may be a troll said in a review that Britons did/do not eat eggs that way, always having them served as what Americans call, "sunny side up."
This seems odd to me, and I think he/she was just being mean and petty..
Do any of our former Brits or others who've eaten eggs in the UK want to comment?
Ian Fleming certainly liked scrambled eggs and had James Bond order them even at supper meals. Fleming said that he could eat scrambled eggs at any meal, and even published his recipe for scrambled.
I don't recall which wine Bond ordered with scrambled eggs for dinner, but a good Riesling or Sauvignon blanc would work well.
My critic is off base, anyway, as the girl cooking that scientist's eggs was Anglo-Brazilian and they were on a remote Brazilian plateau, where the man had probably encountered over easy eggs, anyway, as the girl was intimate with an American reporter who'd probably asked for eggs that way. Some people just want to complain.
A friend in the UK this week said she'd check there, but additional info is appreciated. Those stories are read in over 60 nations, but only this one troll (?) has made such an observation.
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